Open Source Emacs-Lisp Software

Emacs-Lisp Software

Browse free open source Emacs-Lisp Software and projects below. Use the toggles on the left to filter open source Emacs-Lisp Software by OS, license, language, programming language, and project status.

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  • 1
    Ivy Swiper

    Ivy Swiper

    Generic completion frontend for Emacs, Swiper

    Ivy is an interactive interface for completion in Emacs. Emacs uses the completion mechanism in a variety of contexts: code, menus, commands, variables, functions, etc. Completion entails listing, sorting, filtering, previewing, and applying actions on selected items. When active, ivy-mode completes the selection process by narrowing available choices while previewing in the minibuffer. Selecting the final candidate is either through simple keyboard character inputs or through powerful regular expressions. Ivy is for quick and easy selection from a list. When Emacs prompts for a string from a list of several possible choices, Ivy springs into action to assist in narrowing and picking the right string from a vast number of choices.
    Downloads: 17 This Week
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  • 2
    Mozc

    Mozc

    Mozc - a Japanese Input Method Editor designed for multi-platform

    Mozc is an open source Japanese Input Method Editor (IME) developed by Google, designed to provide Japanese text input across multiple operating systems including Android, macOS, Windows, GNU/Linux, and Chromium OS. The project originated as a subset of Google Japanese Input, released publicly under the BSD 3-Clause license for community use and development. Mozc offers core IME functionality such as text conversion, prediction, and dictionary-based input, enabling users to efficiently type and edit Japanese text. While Mozc shares much of its codebase with Google’s internal IME, it operates as an independent open source project without official support, guarantees, or stable release cycles. Developers can build Mozc from source for their preferred platform, and the repository includes detailed build instructions for Android, Linux, macOS, and Windows environments.
    Downloads: 15 This Week
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  • 3
    org-ql

    org-ql

    An Org-mode query language, including search commands and saved views

    This package provides a query language for Org files. It offers two syntax styles: Lisp-like sexps and search engine-like keywords. It includes three libraries: The org-ql library is flexible and may be used as a backend for other tools. The libraries org-ql-search and helm-org-ql (a separate package) provide interactive search commands and saved views. The package org-ql may be installed directly from MELPA or with other tools like Quelpa. After installation, you can use the commands without additional configuration. To use the functions and macros in your own Elisp code, use libraries org-ql and org-ql-view. Feedback on these APIs is welcome. Eventually, after being tested and polished, they will be considered stable. When formatting entries for Org QL View buffers, use internal function for retrieving heading tags. This improves speed by using our cache, and it removes the need for a compatibility alias for Org versions before 9.3.
    Downloads: 10 This Week
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  • 4
    dumb-jump

    dumb-jump

    an Emacs "jump to definition" package for 50+ languages

    Dumb Jump is an Emacs "jump to definition" package with support for 50+ programming languages that favors "just working". This means minimal -- and ideally zero-configuration with absolutely no stored indexes (TAGS) or persistent background processes. Dumb Jump requires at least GNU Emacs 24.3. Dumb Jump uses The Silver Searcher ag, ripgrep rg, or grep to find potential definitions of a function or variable under point. It uses a set of regular expressions based on the file extension, or major-mode, of the current buffer. The matches are run through a shared set of heuristic methods to find the best candidate to jump to. If it can't decide it will present the user with a list in a pop-menu, helm, or ivy (see dumb-jump-selector). For the currently supported languages it seems to do a good job of finding what you want. If you find a case where it does not work as expected do not hesitate to open an issue. It can be slow if it needs to use grep and/or a project is large.
    Downloads: 6 This Week
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  • The Apple Device Management and Security Platform Icon
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  • 5
    Blamer.el

    Blamer.el

    A git blame plugin for emacs inspired by VS Code's GitLens plugin

    A git blame plugin for emacs inspired by VS Code’s GitLens plugin and Vim plugin.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 6
    ELisp Tree-sitter

    ELisp Tree-sitter

    Tree-sitter bindings for Emacs Lisp

    tree-sitter is an Emacs binding for Tree-sitter, an incremental parsing system. It aims to be the foundation for a new breed of Emacs packages that understand code structurally. Faster, fine-grained code highlighting. More flexible code folding. Structural editing (like Paredit, or even better) for non-Lisp code. More informative indexing for imenu. The author of Tree-sitter articulated its merits a lot better in this Strange Loop talk. The minor mode tree-sitter-mode provides a buffer-local syntax tree, which is kept up-to-date with changes to the buffer’s text. Run M-x tree-sitter-hl-mode to replace the regex-based highlighting provided by font-lock-mode with tree-based syntax highlighting.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 7
    Language Server Protocol for Emacs

    Language Server Protocol for Emacs

    Emacs client/library for the language server protocol

    Client for Language Server Protocol (v3.14). lsp-mode aims to provide IDE-like experience by providing optional integration with the most popular Emacs packages like company, flycheck and projectile. Works out of the box and automatically upgrades if additional packages are present. Choose between full-blown IDE with flashy UI or minimal distraction-free. Supports all features in Language Server Protocol v3.14. Semantic tokens as defined by LSP 3.16 (compatible language servers include recent development builds of clangd and rust-analyzer). If LSP server supports completion, lsp-mode use symbols returned by the server to present the user when completion is triggered via completion-at-point. For UI feedback of the available code actions, you can enable lsp-modeline-code-actions-mode which shows available code actions on modeline.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 8
    Lux

    Lux

    The Lux Programming Language

    Lux is a new programming language in the making. It's meant to be a functional, statically-typed Lisp that will run on several platforms, such as the Java Virtual Machine and JavaScript, Python, Lua, or Ruby interpreters. Lux is in the beta stage. The JVM compiler is pretty stable and the standard library has grown to a respectable size. Also, new experimental support for JavaScript, Python, Lua, and Ruby has been added. Read carefully before using this project, as the license disallows commercial use, and has other conditions which may be undesirable for some. The language is mostly inspired by the following 3 languages. Clojure (syntax, overall look & feel), Haskell (functional programming), and Standard ML (module system). They are implemented as plain-old data-structures whose expressions get eval'ed by the compiler and integrated into the type-checker. The main difference between Lux & Standard ML is that Standard ML separates interfaces/signatures and implementations/structures.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 9
    Magit

    Magit

    A Git porcelain inside Emacs

    Magit is a complete text-based user interface to Git. It fills the glaring gap between the Git command-line interface and various GUIs, letting you perform trivial as well as elaborate version control tasks with just a couple of mnemonic key presses. Magit looks like a prettified version of what you get after running a few Git commands but in Magit every bit of visible information is also actionable to an extent that goes far beyond what any Git GUI provides and it takes care of automatically refreshing this output when it becomes outdated. In the background Magit just runs Git commands and if you wish you can see what exactly is being run, making it possible for you to learn the git command-line by using Magit. Using Magit for a while will make you a more effective version control user. Magit supports and streamlines the use of Git features that most users and developers of other Git clients apparently thought could not be reasonably mapped to a non-command-line interface.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 10
    Clojure Mode

    Clojure Mode

    Emacs support for the Clojure(Script) programming language

    clojure-mode is an Emacs major mode that provides font-lock (syntax highlighting), indentation, navigation and refactoring support for the Clojure(Script) programming language. MELPA Stable is the recommended repo as it has the latest stable version. MELPA has a development snapshot for users who don't mind (infrequent) breakage but don't want to run from a git checkout. Available on the major package.el community maintained repos, MELPA Stable and MELPA repos. All the major modes derive from clojure-mode and provide more or less the same functionality. Differences can be found mostly in the font-locking - e.g. ClojureScript has some built-in constructs that are not present in Clojure. The proper major mode is selected automatically based on the extension of the file you're editing. Having separate major modes gives you the flexibility to attach different hooks to them and to alter their behavior individually (e.g. add extra font-locking just to clojurescript-mode) .
    Downloads: 4 This Week
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  • 11
    Google Style Guides

    Google Style Guides

    Style guides for Google-originated open source projects

    Google Styleguide is a comprehensive collection of coding style guides created and maintained by Google to ensure consistency, readability, and maintainability across its vast array of software projects. These guides define best practices and conventions for writing code in multiple programming languages, from C++ and Python to JavaScript, Go, and Swift. By adhering to these standards, developers can more easily collaborate, review code, and maintain high-quality software across teams and open source contributions. Each guide covers a wide range of topics, including naming conventions, file organization, indentation, documentation, and usage of specific language features. The repository also provides supplementary resources such as an Emacs configuration file for Google’s C++ style and references to related guidelines like Effective Dart and Kotlin Style Guide.
    Downloads: 4 This Week
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  • 12
    Solarized for Emacs

    Solarized for Emacs

    The Solarized colour theme, ported to Emacs

    Solarized for Emacs is an Emacs 24bit theme making use of of the Solarized palette, developed by Ethan Schoonover. Solarized for Emacs supports officially Emacs 24+, but should be working under Emacs 23 as well. The theme is implemented in terms of customizations and def theme and does not require the color-theme-package. Solarized for Emacs is available for installation via the MELPA using package.el. This package will install two variants of the theme; solarized-light-theme and solarized-dark-theme. You can load one of the theme variants with M-x load-theme. The intent of this theme will always be that Solarized-dark/light will give you the best possible experience. Palettes other than Solarized will never have influence over theming decisions, they are complementary. You should not expect the complementary themes to be fully accurate or the most suitable versions of how to apply those palettes into an emacs theme.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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  • 13
    lispy

    lispy

    Short and sweet LISP editing

    This package reimagines Paredit - a popular method to navigate and edit LISP code in Emacs. Most of more than 100 interactive commands that lispy provides are bound to a-z and A-Z in lispy-mode. The advantage of short bindings is that you are more likely to use them. As you use them more, you learn how to combine them, increasing your editing efficiency. To further facilitate building complex commands from smaller commands, lispy-mode binds digit-argument to 0-9. For example, you can mark the third element of the list with 3m. You can then mark third through fifth element (three total) with 2> or >>. You can then move the selection to the last three elements of the list with 99j. If you are currently using Paredit, note that lispy-mode and paredit-mode can actually coexist with very few conflicts, although there would be some redundancy.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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  • 14
    telega.el

    telega.el

    GNU Emacs telegram client (unofficial)

    telega is a full-featured unofficial client for Telegram platform for GNU Emacs. telega is actively developed, for this reason, some features are not implemented, or they are present just as skeletons for future implementation. However, the core parts are mature enough so that it is possible to use telega on daily basis. telega depends on the visual-fill-column and rainbow-identifiers packages. This dependency automatically installs if you install telega from MELPA or GNU Guix. Otherwise, will you need to install these packages by hand? telega is built on top of the official library provided by Telegram TDLib. Most distributions do not provide this package in their repositories, in which case you will have to install it manually by following the instructions. GNU Guix, however, does have both telega and TDLib packaged. If you use GNU Guix you can skip directly to Installing from GNU Guix.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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  • 15
    emacs-w64

    emacs-w64

    64-Bit GNU Emacs for MS Windows with optimization.

    A GNU Emacs binary distribution for users who want to use Emacs natively in 64-Bit Windows (x86_64). This project will focus on providing unmodified, up-to-date (from git master and newest release), and optimized w64 binary builds. Also available on GitHub: https://github.com/zklhp/emacs-w64/releases For details concerning the build, please see the wiki page on https://sourceforge.net/p/emacsbinw64/wiki/Build%20guideline%20for%20MSYS2-MinGW-w64%20system/. 中文版请看这里: http://chriszheng.science/2015/03/19/Chinese-version-of-Emacs-building-guideline/.
    Downloads: 14 This Week
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  • 16
    Citar

    Citar

    Emacs package to quickly find and act on bibliographic references

    Emacs package to quickly find and act on bibliographic references, and edit org, markdown, and latex academic documents. Citar provides a highly configurable completing-read front-end to browse and act on BibTeX, BibLaTeX, and CSL JSON bibliographic data, and LaTeX, markdown, and org-cite editing support.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 17
    Elfeed Emacs Web Feed Reader

    Elfeed Emacs Web Feed Reader

    An Emacs web feeds client

    Elfeed is an extensible web feed reader for Emacs, supporting both Atom and RSS. It requires Emacs 24.3 and is available for download from MELPA or el-get.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 18
    Quelpa

    Quelpa

    Build and install your Emacs Lisp packages on-the-fly

    Quelpa is a package manager for Emacs that allows users to build and install Emacs Lisp packages directly from source. It supports fetching packages from various sources, including Git repositories, and integrates with Emacs' package management system. Quelpa enables users to access the latest versions of packages and is particularly useful for those who prefer to work with cutting-edge software.​
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 19
    SLIME

    SLIME

    The Superior Lisp Interaction Mode for Emacs

    SLIME is a Emacs mode for Common Lisp development. Inspired by existing systems such Emacs Lisp and ILISP, we are working to create an environment for hacking Common Lisp in. SLIME extends Emacs with support for interactive programming in Common Lisp. The features are centered around slime mode, an Emacs minor mode that complements the standard lisp mode. While lisp-mode supports editing Lisp source files, slime-mode adds support for interacting with a running Common Lisp process for compilation, debugging, documentation lookup, and so on. The Read-Eval-Print Loop ("top-level") is written in Emacs Lisp for tighter integration with Emacs. The REPL also has builtin "shortcut" commands similar to those of the McCLIM listener. SLIME is able to take compiler messages and annotate them directly into source buffers.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 20
    Tomorrow Theme

    Tomorrow Theme

    Tomorrow Theme

    Tomorrow Theme is a family of carefully balanced color schemes designed to provide consistent, readable syntax highlighting across editors, terminals, and code-hosting sites. The palette comes in multiple variants—Tomorrow (light) and several “Tomorrow Night” options like Bright, Blue, and Eighties—so developers can choose a tone that matches their environment without losing legibility. Each scheme defines a small, harmonious set of base and accent colors that map predictably to tokens such as keywords, strings, numbers, and comments, reducing visual noise while preserving structure. The project ships ports for a wide range of tools (from Vim and Emacs to Sublime Text, iTerm, and more) and documents the palette so others can create faithful ports. Its emphasis on restraint and consistency makes it a popular baseline for teams that want code to look familiar across machines and applications.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 21
    web-mode.el

    web-mode.el

    Web template editing mode for emacs

    web-mode.el is an autonomous emacs major mode for editing web templates. HTML documents can embed parts (CSS / JavaScript) and blocks (client / server side). web-mode.el is compatible with many template engines: PHP, JSP, ASP, Django, Twig, Jinja, Mustache, ERB, FreeMarker, Velocity, Cheetah, Smarty, CTemplate, Mustache, Blade, ErlyDTL, Go Template, Dust.js, Google Closure (soy), React/JSX, Angularjs, ejs, Nunjucks, etc. Compatibility with many template engines : php, jsp, gsp (grails), asp / asp.net ajax (atlas), django / twig / jinja(2) / erlydtl (zotonic) / selmer, erb, ejs, freemarker, velocity, cheetah, smarty, ctemplate / mustache / hapax / handlebars / meteor / blaze / ember.js / velvet, blade (laravel), knockoutjs, go template (revel), razor/play, dust, closure (soy), underscore.js, template-toolkit, liquid (jekyll), angular.js, web2py, mako (pylons), reactjs (jsx), mojolicious, elixir (erlang), thymeleaf, cl-emb, heist, archibus, xoops, hero, spip, svelte, elixir.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 22
    zenburn-theme for Emacs

    zenburn-theme for Emacs

    The Zenburn colour theme ported to Emacs

    Zenburn for Emacs is a direct port of the popular Zenburn theme for vim, developed by Jani Nurminen. It's my personal belief (and that of its many users I presume) that it's one of the best low-contrast color themes out there and that it is exceptionally easy on the eyes. This theme uses the "new" (it used to be new several years ago when I created this package) built-in theming support available starting with Emacs 24.1. You can support the development of Zenburn for Emacs via GitHub Sponsors, ko-fi, PayPal and Patreon. Zenburn for Emacs is already bundled into Emacs Prelude. If you're a Prelude user - you're probably already using Zenburn, since it's Prelude's default color theme. You can load Zenburn at any time by M-x load-theme zenburn. If you'd like to tweak the theme by changing just a few colors, you can do so by defining new values in the zenburn-override-colors-alist variable before loading the theme.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 23
    Centaur Emacs

    Centaur Emacs

    A Fancy and Fast Emacs Configuration

    This is an Emacs distribution that aims to enhance the default Emacs experience. It alters a lot of the default settings, bundles a plethora of additional packages and adds its own core library to the mix. The final product offers an easy to use Emacs configuration for Emacs newcomers and lots of additional power for Emacs power users. It’s able to run on Windows, GNU Linux and macOS. It is compatible ONLY with GNU Emacs 26.1 and above. In general you’re advised to always run with the latest stable release, currently 28.2. Supports multiple programming languages, C/C++/Object-C/C#/Java, Python/Ruby/Perl/PHP/Shell/Powershell/Bat, JavaScript/Typescript/JSON/YAML, HTML/CSS/XML, and Golang/Swift/Rust/Dart/Elixir.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 24
    Flycheck

    Flycheck

    On the fly syntax checking for GNU Emacs

    Flycheck is a modern on-the-fly syntax-checking extension for GNU Emacs, intended as replacement for the older Flymake extension which is part of GNU Emacs. For a detailed comparison to Flymake see Flycheck versus Flymake. It uses various syntax checking and linting tools to automatically check the contents of buffers while you type, and reports warnings and errors directly in the buffer, or in an optional error list. Out of the box Flycheck supports over 40 different programming languages with more than 80 different syntax-checking tools, and comes with a simple interface to define new syntax checkers. Many 3rd party extensions provide new syntax checkers and other features like alternative error displays or mode line indicators. Flycheck needs GNU Emacs 24.3+, and works best on Unix systems. Windows users, please be aware that Flycheck does not support Windows officially, although it should mostly work fine on Windows.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 25
    org-super-agenda

    org-super-agenda

    Supercharge your Org daily/weekly agenda by grouping items

    This package lets you “supercharge” your Org daily/weekly agenda. The idea is to group items into sections, rather than having them all in one big list. Now you can sort-of do this already with custom agenda commands, but when you do that, you lose the daily/weekly aspect of the agenda: items are no longer shown based on deadline/scheduled timestamps, but are shown no-matter-what. So this package filters the results from org-agenda-finalize-entries, which runs just before items are inserted into agenda views. It runs them through a set of filters that separate them into groups. Then the groups are inserted into the agenda buffer, and any remaining items are inserted at the end. Empty groups are not displayed. The end result is your standard daily/weekly agenda, but arranged into groups defined by you. You might put items with certain tags in one group, habits in another group, items with certain todo keywords in another, and items with certain priorities in another.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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